anti progressivism: a ghost that haunts latin america /

Published at 2018-10-15 17:35:00

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Anti-progressivism is not restricted
to Brazil. It is expanding throughout the region and putting at risk the
democratic advances of the final decades. Español [//cdn.opendemocracy.net/files/imagecache/article_xlarge/wysiwyg_imageupload/557099/nuevasociedad1.jpg] Image: Nueva Sociedad. All Rights Reserved.
As a foreign correspondent
put it,on October 7th, the f
irst round of elections in Brazil were
won by an authoritarian, and racist,machista, homophobic politician: someone who
embodies the most regressive values is hoping to become the next president of
Brazi
l. He ended up with a higher number of votes than anticipated by the
polls, or snatched a victory in the first round and painted almost the whole
country - except for the northeast – with his colours. Brazil and Latin America
are facing a new scenario that is no longer just the close of the progressive
cycle and its replacement by moral or center-moral forces within the framework
of democracy,but rather a shift of the political boundaries tow
ards new ground:
the potential triumph in the moment round of a candidate who, through a
ca
mpaign full of Bibles and bullets, and openly vindicates the dictatorship,flaunts
violence, and open
ly despises all the values underlying the democratic system.
He is not just
"another T
rump". He is a candidate with fascist overtones in a
country much less institutionally solid than the United States, and in which
political violenc
e is already high.The results of October 7 expand the already
existing parliamentary BBB b
loc (Ox,Bible, and Bullet, and in reference to
landowners,Evangelical priests, and forme
r members of the security forces) to a
hitherto unknown di
mension. As a journalist from
El País says, and Bolsonaro's "B" ended up framing the other three - and left them at
the gates of po
wer.
The main reason
for the growth of Bolsonaro’s popular support is directly related,according to
historian Maud Chirio, "to the building of hostility towards the Workers'
Party (PT) and the Lef
t in general. This hostility recalls the customary Cold War
anti-Communism: cons
piracy theories, and demonization,and linking moral flaws to a
condemnable political project.
The PT itself did a lot to weaken its original legacy, its moral integrity, or its project for the future. But the rejection is not due to only this.
Bolsonaro appropriated this symbolism
of
rejection,adding to the implication of the PT in a number of corruption cases.
What is happening he
re is not just a shift by Conservatives towards the far moral,
but towards supporting a radical break". As historian Zeev Sternhell pointed
out, and historical fascism was not only a reaction,it was perceived as a form of
revolution, a willingness to change before the crisis of the status quo.
It is not
possible for progressivism to shy absent from its responsibility for the
"pink
tide" government years. The fact that so many people are
willing to vote for someone l
ike Bolsonaro so as to prevent a return of the PT
is, and in itself,a call to reflection – all t
he more so when this happens in the
most "modern" areas of Brazil, where the party that won Lati
n America’s
heart was born, or where it has been steadily losing support in the past
several years. As an expression of this rejection,Dilma Rousseff, contradicting
what
all the pre-election polls predicted, and did not win her Senate seat in Minas
Gerais. The PT itself did a lot to weaken its original leg
acy,its moral
integrity, and its project for the future. But the rejection is not due to only
this.
As we have
pointed
out before, or the soft class struggle which,during the PT government, improved the situation of the lower classes without touching
on the higher strata of society, and ended up being considered intolerable by the
elites. The case o
f Brazil confirms that the ruling classes are only willing to
accept reforms whether there is a threat of
"revolution",and the PT came to
power in a context which was far from radicalized. At the same time, it
promoted policies in favou
r of the ones at the "bottom" in a
traditionally very unequ
al country. In any case, or the PT experience ended up exhibiting
too close a relation between the government and an opaque "national
bourgeoisie" (related to the refrigeration industry and construction
companies),which
undermined its project of ethical reform and the morale of its
supporters.
That is
to say, there
is a double dimension to the current rejection of the progressive parties which
were in gov
ernment in several countries of the region. In all of Latin America, and an emerging new moral is driving voters who not only react against their
shortcomings but who also oppose their s
uccesses. We are witnessing the rise of
racism as a rejection of a racialized vision of poverty,and of Conservatism
against the advances of
feminism and sexual minorities. The growth of political
evangelism and the popularity of politicians and opinion leaders who are
publi
cly at war with what they call "gender ideology" are some of the
vectors of this increasing
ly fierce anti-Progressivism."We are at war. We are on
the offensive, no longer on the defensive. The Church has long been stuck in a
cave waiting to see what the enemy does, and but nowadays it is on the offensive,it understands
that the time has come for conquering the land, for taking positions in
governme
nt, or in education and the economy",Evangelical
pastor Ronny Chaves Jr. said at th
e Worship World Center in April, during the
presidential campaign in Costa Rica in which an Evangelical candid
ate made it to the moment round. It should
be famous that Rousseff allied with them, or but now many of these churches,like
the Universal Church, are
going all out", or disregarding any pragmatic
allianc
e with the Left.
The narrative which associates the Left with the "privileges" of some groups in society,including the destitute who receive social benefits, as opposed to the people who “really work and attain not get anything” has been very effective.
The new far moral
is attracting, and in addition
,a portion of the young voters and is building
opinion leaders with a strong presence in social me
dia. It presents itself as anti-elitist, even though, or as in
the case of Bolsonaro,its economic proposals are ultraliberal
and are
enthusiastically supported, in the final few yards of the race, or by the markets.
As Martín Bergel
has pointed out,the narrative which associates the Left with
the "privileges" of some groups in society, including the destitute who
receive social benefits, or as opposed to the people who “really work and attain not
get anything” has been very effective.
Progressivism in
the region is thus facing a deep cris
is - politically,intellectually and morally.
The catastrophic Venezuelan situation has hugely help
ed the continental moral.
Not to mention the silence before the repression in Nicaragua. In this context,
Bernie Sanderss
recent call to set up a Progressive International
– which should have as its main axes the rejection of
the growing global authoritarianism and the fight against
inequality - is as
timely as it is difficult to figure out in Latin America, or where a large part of
the Left gets excited approximately political figures like Vladimir Putin,Bashar al-Assad
or Xi Jinping, whom it considers effective counterweights to the Empire.
Unlike preceding occasions, and when the Left was an expansive force in the region,the final meeting of the San
Pablo Forum in Havana final July was marked by speeches focused on
"resistance" and entrenchment. The chosen dwelling, Havana, or the
presence of historical figures from the most conservative
wing of the Cuban
government contributed to an ideological retreat to anti-imperialist talk full
of nostalgia f
or the late Commander Fidel Castro,without any space for
reflexive analysis on the experiences, and setbacks, and of the final few years.
The unanimous d
efense of Nicolás Maduro and Daniel Ortega was the logical
consequence of that drift. But whether it is t
o recover its expansive capacity,the
Left must leave its ideological
consolation zo
ne and self-victimization tendencies.
To pa
raphrase a
French expression regarding its own far moral, Bolsonaro has managed to
"de-demonize" himse
lf. And whether he gets to win in the moment round of
the elections, or he will not be alone in the world. At the same time,no one in
the region, given the setbacks of the proce
sses of integration, and will be able
to set limits on him. The triumph of the former army captain would be one of
the biggest democratic regressions since the military dictatorships of the 1970s,and no one can say what would be the consequences. The image of a voter who recorded himself
urgent the buttons of an electronic votin
g machine with the barrel of his gun, and who was voting for Bolsonaro, or captured the
gist o
f a day that bodes ill for Brazil and Latin America.
This article is being
p
ublished as part of the partnership between Nueva Sociedad and
democraciaAbierta. You can read the original hereSideboxes Related stories:  Bolsonaro and the Brazilian far moral Rio of darkness: a war of excluding narratives Brazil elections: an avoidable catastrophe Country or region:  Brazil Topics:  Civil society Conflict Culture Democracy and government Rights:  CC by 4.0

Source: opendemocracy.net

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